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Only in America...
Surviving the brutal communist regime of the
Soviet Union a marvelous display from aristocratic Czarist Russia
is presented to America
by John Horvat II
It
must have been a sight to see. Our guide seemed delighted retelling
the story of a man so awed by the ornate, seventeenth-century gilded
carriage that he could not resist the urge. He just had to sit in
it. When he stepped over the small security barrier, the alarms
sounded; his attempt was foiled.
A Russian visitor observing the scene commented
that the man would never do something like that in his country.
This could happen, our guide continued "only in America."
I was intrigued hearing the story. I could not
help but think that, in fact, things like this really do happen
only in America. But how is it that we can pride ourselves on our
jet-age transports and yet admire a fairy-tale carriage? We live
in a country fraught with contradictions, and this is but one more.
Unlike
some that might regret these contradictions, I do not find them
disturbing. Rather, I think them delightful enigmas that invite
us to savor and reflect upon them fully. They are astonishing paradoxes
that challenge our myths. They represent a spectacular clash of
contrasts that reveal a certain captivating side of the American
soul.
After all, where else but near pragmatic New York
City will one find a traditional English fox hunt where hunters
roam an area three times the size of Manhattan? Where but in Kentucky
can one find a fully medieval Gothic cathedral modeled after Paris'
Notre Dame and St. Denis, and featuring the world's largest stained
glass ecclesiastical window? And where would one scramble to secure
a ticket to a dazzling aristocratic exhibit on Czarist Russia?
Only
in America
"Nicholas and Alexandra: The Last Imperial
Family of Tsarist Russia" made its world debut at the new First
USA Riverfront Arts Center in Wilmington, Delaware, last August
1. It boasts one of the largest collections of Imperial treasures
ever assembled outside Russia. Over five thousand visitors drifted
through its fourteen galleries each day. Such was the exhibit's
popularity that its closing was postponed from December 31 to February
14.
Crossing the exhibit's threshold, one is transported
into another world. Perhaps that is the most striking aspect that
helps explain why people flock to it. Although taking us back just
82 short years, the exhibit presents a world very unlike our own.
"We don't have anything like it," lamented
one visitor. "We don't have glamour, elegance, and manners
anymore." Indeed, every gallery immerses viewers in a world
of quality that they cannot help but contrast with our present world.
Surely we have lost something very important.
Seeing the gilded state carriage, one imagines
it passing through the streets of Moscow carrying the czarina to
the 1896 coronation. Standing before the imperial throne evokes
thoughts of a royal audience. The display of elegant court gowns
and striking military uniforms re-creates something of the marvelous
ambience that permeated that whole society.
Of particular interest is a 190-foot panorama of
Moscow, painted in 1896 to document the resplendent coronation festivities
for Nicholas II. Displayed in its entirety for the first and only
time this century, it communicates something of the vigorous enthusiasm
of a whole people for the symbolic person of their monarch.
"Why are we so fascinated by these distant
monarchs?" I asked a fellow observer.
"People are enamored with royalty," she
responded. "I think it's impressive to see such perfection
and quality."
I was particularly impressed by the personal link
between the monarch and his people, evident in the ornate gift from
the peasants of Kiev to their czar, the honors given by the people
to members of the Imperial family, and the outpouring of popular
affection seen in paintings from the period. One senses a genuine
relationship between the czar and the people.
Although the autocratic regime of the Russian czars
was far from the medieval organic monarchy, one could catch a glimpse
of what a true ruler might be. In our days of media-made leaders,
it was refreshing to see a family that lived a legend. They epitomized
the very essence of what it was to be Russian.
Finally, however controversial their lives may
have been, one senses the brutality of the Communist Revolution,
whose partisans massacred the Imperial family. As piercing as the
displayed Winchester bayonet used in that heinous act, the Revolution
that burst upon Russian society toppled more than just a government
and a throne. It overthrew a way of life and a world of tradition,
and severed Russia from its roots.
Modernity has taken this world of tradition away
from us. I suspect that part of the exhibit's charm is its healthy
attempt to reconnect us with tradition. It reminds us that tradition
is a necessary good for the human soul, giving color and definition
to life. Having lost touch with our own traditions, our souls thirst
for that lost something that others had.
When pondering this kind of thing, I often wonder
if perhaps beneath the veneer of our hyper-industrial, media-hyped
society, a tired America lives. In those ever-rarer moments of calm,
I cannot help but think this America harbors a certain yearning,
however fleeting, for the higher things of life - things like honor,
excellence, and even grandeur.
And I suspect that in these only-in-America contradictions,
found all over the country, we see much more of the real America
than in the pre-packaged Hollywood images of ourselves.
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